ncd prevention strategies
DESCRIPTION
Pekka Puska Moscow 28.04.2011TRANSCRIPT
Dr Pekka PuskaDirector General
National Institute for Health and Welfare (THL)
Finland 预防和控制非传染病 Профилактика неинфекционных заболеваний и борьба с ними
المعدية غير األمراض من الوقايةومكافحتها
Prevención y control de las enfermedades no transmisibles
Prevention and control of noncommunicable diseases Prévention et maîtrise des maladies non transmissibles
Pekka Puska, Director General
GREETINGS FROM FINLAND
NCDs are preventable
• From a medical point of view NDCs are to a great extent preventable diseases until late in life
• Prevention is based on the elimination of lifestyle-related risk factors (tobacco, diet, physical activity, alcohol)
• Lifestyles are greatly influenced by social and physical environments
Amenable to policies
Pekka Puska, Director General
Change in age-adjusted mortality rates Finland, males aged 35–64 (per 100 000 population)
extension of the Project nationally
start of the North Karelia Project
North Karelia -85%
All Finland -80%
Rate per 100 000
1969-1971
2006 Change from 1969-1971 to 2006
All causes 1328 583 -56%
All cardiovascular
680 172 -75%
Coronary heart disease
489 103 -79%
All cancers 262 124 -53%
Coronary heart diseaseCoronary heart disease
Gain of some 10 healthy years
in Finnish popupaltion
Gain of some 10 healthy years
in Finnish popupaltion
Cornerstones of NCD prevention and control (WHO global strategy, 2000)• Attention to behavioural risk factors
– Tobacco use– Unhealthy diet– Physical inactivity– Harmful use of alcohol
• Monitoring and surveillance of – Risk factors and diseases– Preventive actions
• Redirection of health services– Prevention– Chronic care model
Pekka Puska, Director General
*Surveillance*Mapping the epidemic of
NCDs
*Management*Strengthen
health care for people with
NCDs
*Prevention*Reducing the
level of exposure to risk factors
World Health Assembly in 2000: There is a strategic vision on how to address NCDs
Entry points for NCD prevention & control
• Diseases– Vertical, clinical, limited public health impact
• Risk factors/lifestyles– Direct impact on many NCDs, cost-
effective at a population level
• Determinants– Basic, general political
decisions for health promoting conditions
and possibilities
Pekka Puska, Director General
Pekka Puska, Director General
Lifestyle changes – whose responsibility?
Individual responsibility is important but:
• people’s behaviours are significantly related to socioeconomic determinants
• national lifestyles are deeply rooted in national, social and physical environments
• And are amenable to policy interventions
Public responsibility
Policy actions
“Make the healthy choice
the easy one” (Ottawa charter)
Intersectoral work towards prevention- ”Health in all policies”
• People’s lifestyles are influenced by decisions in different sectors of society (much of them beyond the health sector)
• Health in general and NCD prevention in particular should be taken into account in decisions made by different sectors (health impact assessment)
• Identification of possibilities for “win-win” situations
Pekka Puska, Director General
Examples of intersectoral work 1.
Development of Finnish Rapeseed oil
Fen: y = -0.16x + 362
Gen: y = -0.16x + 358
41
42
42
43
43
44
44
45
45
1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010
Year
g/kg
Fen
Gen
Change in fat content of Finnish cow milk
Change in fat content of Finnish cow milk
Examples of intersectoral work 2.
Biscuit example:
• Leading Finnish biscuit manufacturer (LU Finland Ltd) has removed some 80.000 kg of SAFA by changing the fats used
• All trans fats removed and major transfer to rapeseed oil
Meat product example:
HK (Leading Finnish meat company)
since 2007 annually:
• 40.000 kg less salt
• 10.000 kg less saturated
fat in their products 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995
YEAR
1.6
1.8
2.0
2.2
2.4
Salt
co
ncen
tratio
n (
%)
Salt level in Finnish sausages
Comprehensive action and partnership for national NCD prevention
• Health services
• Governments (national, local)
• Civil society (NGOs)
• Private sector
• Media
• International collaboration
During the last few years a great number of strategies and plans for evidence-based, effective prevention and health promotion have been produced
Many important priorities have been identified
-> From priorities
to implementation
Pekka Puska, Director General
Risk factor / disease Interventions
Tobacco use
– Raise taxes on tobacco– Protect people from tobacco smoke– Warn about the dangers of tobacco– Enforce bans on tobacco advertising
Harmful use of alcohol– Raise taxes on alcohol – Restrict access to retailed alcohol– Enforce bans on alcohol advertising
Unhealthy diet andphysical inactivity
– Reduce salt intake in food– Replace trans fat with polyunsaturated fat– Promote public awareness about diet and physical activity (via mass media)
Cardiovascular diseaseand diabetes
– Provide counselling and multi-drug therapy (including blood sugar control for diabetes mellitus) for people with medium-high risk of developing heart attacks and strokes (including those who have established CVD)
– Treat heart attacks ( myocardial infarction) with aspirin
Cancer
– Hepatitis B immunization beginning at birth to prevent liver cancer – Screening and treatment of pre-cancerous lesions to prevent cervical cancer
Priorities for investment: best buys
”Best buys” for NCD preventionTop priority
• National tobacco policy (FCTC implementation)
• Reduction of salt intake (industry collaboration & regulation
Others
• Reduction of saturated & transfats (industry collaboration & regulation)
• Promotion of availability & affordability of fruits & vegetables
• Promotion of daily physical activity (increased PA possibilities)
• National alcohol policy (taxes, availability – in many countries)
Preventative practices in primary health care
Redirection of health services
10/04/23 Presentation name / Author 18
• Reorientation and strengthening of health systems
• Primary health care:
”Now more than ever”
(WHR 2008)
• Special emphasis for NCDs
• Chronic care model
• Preventive practices
Exposures:-Behavioural risk factors: tobacco use, physical inactivity, the harmful use of alcohol and unhealthy diet.-Physiological and metabolic risk factors: raised blood pressure, overweight/obesity, raised blood glucose, and raised cholesterol.-Social determinants: educational level, household income, access to health care.
A framework for national NCD surveillance
Outcomes:- Mortality: NCD-specific mortality.- Morbidity: Cancer incidence and type.
Health system response:- Interventions and health system capacity: infrastructure, policies and plans, access to key health-care
interventions and treatments, partnerships.
Surveillance • Monitoring of
DiseasesRisk factors/behavioursDeterminantsPrevention & control process
• National institutional base for surveillance and links with national health monitoring
• International standardization and collaboration
• Active use of surveillance results: Feed-back, communication
10/04/23 Presentation name / Author 20
• ”Best buys”:
NCD mortality trend
Core risk factor trends
Global level action
• Increasing burden of NCDs in the developing
world is a consequence of globalisation of
unhealthy lifestyles – related to urbanization,
global communication
and marketing etc.
• WHO’s leadership
• WHO’s global
Action Plan 2007-12
Pekka Puska, Director General
Six objectives:
1. Raising the priority accorded to NCDs in development work at global and national levels, and integrating prevention and control of NCDs into policies across all government departments
2. Establishing and strengthening national policies and programmes
3. Reducing and preventing risk factors
4. Prioritizing research on prevention and health care
5. Strengthening partnerships
6. Monitoring NCD trends and assessing progress made at country level
Six objectives:
1. Raising the priority accorded to NCDs in development work at global and national levels, and integrating prevention and control of NCDs into policies across all government departments
2. Establishing and strengthening national policies and programmes
3. Reducing and preventing risk factors
4. Prioritizing research on prevention and health care
5. Strengthening partnerships
6. Monitoring NCD trends and assessing progress made at country level
World Health Assembly in 2008: There is a long-term roadmap for all countries and partners
Global instruments for influencing NCD lifestyles
• Tobacco: FCTC (2003)
• Diet & Physical activity: global strategy (2004)
• Alcohol: global strategy (2010)
Global instruments and actions – supported by necessary resources - needed for counteracting negative social consequences of globalization. Focus on low and middle income countries.
WHO’s ministeral conference on NCDs
• Moscow April 2011
• Ministry of Health of Russian Federation, together with WHO
• Global ministerial platform for raising advocacy on NCD prevention and control
Pekka Puska, Director General
UN high-level summit on NCDsNew York Sept 2011
”Unprecedented opportunity” for high-level political support and action on global NCD prevention and control”
Thank you